Comments by "Scented-leaf Pelargonium" (@scented-leafpelargonium3366) on "KernowDamo" channel.

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  36.  @loxism72  Well they all appear in the Bible in Hebrew. Aramaic is very similar to Hebrew and parts of the Bible are written in it, such as in the book of Daniel etc. If you can read Hebrew you can read Aramaic. That does not mean it has no Jewish links, which seems to be the direction you are going in bringing up the subject of DNA. Yeshua would have spoken Aramaic, which is why He was never called "Jesus," which is not Semitic (not 'semetic'). After October 7th many of the charred burnt remains were identified by DNA, so where do you get the information that DNA tests are banned in Israel? There are a lot of anti-Jewish conspiracy tropes out there. Your Askenazi claim borders on such obsession. Have you researched the Palestinian Arabs' DNA? You will find that a lot of them are bloodline Jews that converted to Islam when it conquered the Holy Land by the sword. Will you loudly shout that they are not real Arabs? Expose them? Ashkenazi are simply Jews who descend from Caucasian and European centuries of living and culture, the same as the Sephardi or Arabic speaking Jews who formerly lived for centuries in what became the Islamic nations of the Middle East, including the non-Arab Islamic states of Iran and Turkey, all were dark swarthy skinned like the Arabs. In both cases they remained Jews 100% as both the Christians and the Muslims despised them, so their Jewishness was never overlooked, absorbed, or assimilated, but rather they were subject to discrimination & pogroms. And what is your own DNA and that of your country? Is it a pure unbroken bloodline like the Aryan obession of the Nazis? If you can't answer about yourself, I would leave the Jews alone! 🙃
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  37.  @coffee6783  I never disputed the Arabs weren't Biblical. The Bible tells their story in great detail. There were Twelve Tribes of Ishmael, who became the Arabs, and equally Twelve Tribes of Israel, who became the Jews. Both descend from one common forefather Abraham, who was the first Hebrew, from the word "eber" meaning "to cross over", and go back as farvas Shem, the son of Noah, making them Shemites or Semites. The Arabs were allotted Arabia and the Jews dwelt in Judea. Now with all the land mass and countries you cite from Damascus to Yemen (for the Arabs only), the Arabs claim Judea ("Jew-dea") too, re-naming it the nameless "West Bank" in order to cover up any historical or Biblical Jewish links. The Bible also cites the expanse of the Kingdom of Israel under David and Solomon, which also extended far beyond any borders seen on the map today, and other peoples paid tribute to them. The Khazar theory has long been debunked and is old hat, and is only continued on by anti-Semites and anti-Israelists (Jew-haters) just as the Arabs still read Hitler's Mein Kampf. The Jews spoke Yiddish in Europe, which is really German with Hebrew words interspersed in it, but they still read and spoke full Hebrew for Bible readings and prayers in their synagogues, so they had by no means lost it, but living in Gentile or non-Jewish countries they needed something less unweildly for everyday usage. The same happened with Ladino, which was used in Spanish speaking countries, and in the Arab countries they had Judeo-Arabic to get by. Yes, to use unadulterated Hebrew for everyday life was a challenge for Jews coming back to Israel (mostly to avoid persecution), but it was the only solution as the common denominator for people speaking so many different foreign languages, and it was a success, much more than I see where I live where they tried to resurrect ancient Irish Gaelic, yet most Irish still speak English in everyday life, so if I was to be describing learning a language as a 'farce,' it certainly would not be Hebrew! You obviously have a deep intrinsic dislike of the Jewish people. 🙃 And as for "Palestine," the name comes from the Biblical Philistines, who dwelt on the narrow coastal strip of land called Philistia, where Gaza is today, but never the whole land of Canaan, which became Israel-Judea. Check your Biblical map that shows Biblical Arabia and you should find it nestled just next to the River of Egypt, with its cities Ekron, Ashkelon and Ashdod.
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